Soybean

ABSTRACT

Disclosed is the seed of a novel soybean cultivar, designated 5.8 i, a sample of which is deposited under ATCC Accession No. PTA-7274. Also disclosed are plants, or parts thereof, grown from the seed of the cultivar, plants having the morphological and physiological characteristics of the 5.8 i cultivar, and methods of using the plants or parts thereof in a soybean breeding program.

CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

Not applicable.

STATEMENT REGARDING FEDERALLY SPONSORED RESEARCH OR DEVELOPMENT

Not applicable.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Soybeans are a major grain crop valued for the high levels of oil andprotein found in soybean seed. Soybean breeding has resulted insignificant improvements in yield potential, stability of yield,adaptation of the species to mechanical harvest, and yield protectionthrough improved disease resistance.

Due to the nature of plant science agriculture, broadly defined as amanipulation of available plant resources to meet the needs of thegrowing human population, the environment in which plants are grown foragricultural production continuously offers new obstacles toagricultural production. Each new cultivar or variety released toagricultural production is selected for the purpose of increasing yieldresulting from increased disease resistance to prevalent diseases, orfrom direct or indirect improvement in yield potential or efficiency ofproduction. Development of stable, high yielding cultivars with superiorcharacteristics is an ongoing goal of soybean breeders.

There is a need in the art for a novel, superior soybean cultivar andsoybean seed.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

In one aspect, the present invention provides a soybean seed designated5.8 i, wherein a sample of said seed has been deposited under ATCCAccession No. PTA-7274.

In another aspect, the present invention provides a soybean plant, or apart thereof, produced by growing seed designated 5.8 i, or a soybeanplant having the characteristics of a plant produced by growing seeddesignated 5.8 i, or pollen or an ovule of a soybean plant according tothe present invention.

The present invention provides a tissue culture of regenerable cellsfrom a plant, or parts thereof, produced by growing seed designated 5.8i, and a soybean plant regenerated from the tissue culture.

The present invention also provides a method for developing a soybeanplant in a soybean breeding program using plant breeding techniques,comprising using a soybean plant, or part thereof, produced by growingseed designated 5.8 i as a source of breeding material.

DEFINITIONS

In the claims, descriptions and tables that follow, numerous terms areused and are defined as follows:

Flower color. Modern soybeans are characterized by two major flowercolors, purple or white. Some cultivars are heterogeneous for flowercolor whereby some plants have purple flowers and some have white.

Leaflet shape. The leaflet may be broad or narrow and may be ovate oroval in shape.

Plant habit refers to stem termination in soybeans and the resultantdifferences in flower production. Indeterminate varieties continue togrow during the reproductive phase, producing new branches and nodesafter flowering is well underway. Determinate varieties tend to delaythe onset of flowering somewhat, and limit new node and branchdevelopment after flowering has been initiated.

Pubescence relates to the plant trichomes or hairs found on the stems,leaves and pods of soybeans.

Pubescence color in modern soybeans may be tawny, gray or light tawny.

Pod color refers to the color of the mature pod wall, as distinct fromthe color of the pubescence, and in modern soybeans, may be brown ortan.

Hilum refers to the point of attachment of soybean seed to maternaltissue.

Hilum color in modern soybeans may be black, brown, yellow, gray, buff,or imperfect black.

Plant height is measured from the top of soil to top node of the plantin any convenient unit of length (i.e., inches, centimeters). For thedata presented herein, plant height was measured just prior to harvestand is expressed in inches.

Lodging resistance relates to the stature of the plant relative to theground. Lodging resistance is rated on a scale of 1 to 5. A score of 1is given to an erect plant. A score of 2.5 is given to a plant that isleaning at a 45-degree angle relative to the ground. A score of 5indicates a plant lying on the ground.

Maturity date is the date when 95% of pods have turned color from greencolor to their mature brown or tan color. The maturity date is countedin days and is calculated from planting date until 95% maturity.

Maturity group refers to an industry division of groups of varietiesbased on the zones in which the varieties are adapted. Soybeans maturedifferentially in response to day-length and thus to latitude wheregrown. In the soybean production areas of the United States, forexample, the northernmost production region of northern Minnesota isplanted to soybeans that mature under very long day-lengths during earlysummer. In the southernmost production regions of the Southeast,soybeans that mature from the influence of short day-length during earlysummer are grown. Those adapted to northern day-lengths are classifiedas early-maturing; those adapted to the southern regions are classifiedas late-maturing. Maturity groups include very long day length varieties(000, 00, 0) and extend to very short day length varieties (VII, VII,IX, X). For example, maturity group I soybean cultivars are typicallygrown in southern Minnesota, whereas maturity group V soybean cultivarsare typically group in the mid-south.

Relative maturity. Within maturity groups, a more precise maturityassignment is given that subdivides each maturity group into tenths. Forexample, a relative maturity of 3.3 is assigned to a late early maturitygroup III soybean cultivar.

Yield refers to the yield of seed harvested from a soybean crop. Yielddata presented herein is expressed as bushels of seed/acre and is theactual yield of the grain at harvest.

Soybean Cyst Nematode (SCN) resistance is based on a comparison ofreproduction rates to a known susceptible cultivar as described bySchmitt et al. (Crop Sci. 32:275-277, 1992), which is incorporated byreference herein. A cultivar with a 0-10% percent reproductive ratecompared to a known susceptible cultivar is classified as resistant (R);a cultivar with an 11-30% reproductive rate compared to a knownsusceptible cultivar is classified as moderately resistant (MR); acultivar with an 31-59% reproductive rate compared to a knownsusceptible cultivar is classified as moderately susceptible (MS).

Southern Stem Canker resistance refers to the casual organism Diaporthephaseolorum meridionalis. There are 4 genes for resistance as describedby G. L. Hartman, J. B. Sinclair and J. C. Rupe (Compendium of SoybeanDiseases—Fourth Edition). In the field, disease development isassociated with early infection and the level of cultivar resistance.

Phylophthora Root Rot resistance refers to the casual organism, P.sojae. A. F. Schmitthenner (Plant Disease 78:269-276). Certain cultivarscan have race-specific resistance. Resistance results in an incompatibleinteraction in which the fungus fails to colonize tissue beyond ahypersensitive fleck-type lesion. (G. L. Hartman, J. B. Sinclair and J.C. Rupe, Compendium of Soybean Diseases—Fourth Edition).

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

Soybean cultivar 5.8 i has superior characteristics and was developedfrom crossing two elite soybean varieties. Criteria used to select invarious generations included seed yield, lodging resistance, emergence,disease resistance and tolerance, maturity, late season plantintactness, plant height, and shattering resistance. F1 and F2 plantswere advanced by a modified single seed descent selection. F2-derived F3plants were grown, tested and bulk-harvested. In Argentina, F4 plantswere selected from the original F3 bulk and further tested for yield andpurity. From these F4 selections, the line now known as 5.8 i, wasselected. In addition, it was tested for yield, agronomics and diseasereactions in over 14 locations in a two year span in Argentina.Production of 5.8 i was performed in both Argentina and the US.

Soybean cultivar 5.8 i is a late group V variety, with a relativematurity of 5.8. The cultivar has very high yield potential, relative tolines of similar maturity, and excellent agronomic characteristics,including lodging resistance. Soybean cultivar 5.8 i is resistant to theRoundup™ herbicides.

Soybean cultivar 5.8 i has uniformity and stability of its morphologicaland other characteristics. The variety description information (Table I)provides a summary of characteristics of soybean cultivar 5.8 i plantcharacteristics. As used herein, “a soybean plant having thephysiological and morphological characteristics of soybean cultivar 5.8i is a plant having the characteristics set forth in Table 1.

TABLE 1 VARIETY DESCRIPTION INFORMATION Seed coat color: Yellow Hilumcolor: Yellow Leaflet size: Medium Leaflet color: Medium to Dark GreenLeaflet shape: Ovate Flower Color: White Plant habit: IndeterminatePubescence color: Gray Pod color: Brown Maturity group: V Relativematurity: 5.8 Phytophthora Root Rot resistance: Rps1a Soybean CystNematode Disease: Moderately Susceptible (MS) Southern Stem Canker:Resistant Roundup ™ Herbicide: Resistant to Roundup Ready ™

Table 2 shows plant height and lodging scores for cultivar 5.8 icompared to that of other known commercial cultivars.

TABLE 2 Summary of plant height and lodging scores of soybean cultivar5.8 i, compared to several competing varieties of commercial soybeans ofsimilar maturity. Years Cultivar Height Lodging 2 5.8 i 41 2.8 A5409 433.0 2 5.8 i 41 2.8 A5417 33 4.2 1 5.8 i 41 1.7 A5520 33 2.0 1 5.8 i 411.7 A5901 41 1.7 2 5.8 i 41 2.8 A6411 37 4.1

TABLE 3 Summary of yield and maturity data of soybean cultivar 5.8 iversus other commercial soybean cultivars. Years Cultivar Reps Yield MatDays 2 5.8 i 29 73.3 +4 A5409 64.4 0 2 5.8 i 29 73.3 +3 A5417 68.2 0 15.8 i 21 69.1 +1 A5520 64.2 0 1 5.8 i 21 69.1 −4 A5901 64.1 0 2 5.8 i 2973.3 −3 A6411 69.6 0 2 5.8 i 27 71.9 −3 DM5800 67.5 0 1 5.8 i 21 69.1 +5MARIA55 59.0 0 1 5.8 i 21 69.1 −2 RAR514 68.8 0

The present invention contemplates using the 5.8 i soybean plant, orpart thereof, or a soybean plant having the physiological andmorphological characteristics of the 5.8 i soybean plant, as a source ofbreeding material for developing a soybean plant in a soybean breedingprogram using plant breeding techniques. Plant breeding techniquesuseful in the developing soybean plants include, but are not limited to,single seed descent, modified single seed descent, recurrent selection,reselection, mass selection, bulk selection, backcrossing, pedigreebreeding, mutation breeding, restriction fragment length polymorphismenhanced selection, genetic marker enhanced selection, andtransformation. Plant breeding techniques are known to the art and havebeen described in the literature. For example, see U.S. Pat. No.6,143,954, which, along with the references cited therein, isincorporated by reference herein.

As used herein, the term “plant” includes plant cells, plantprotoplasts, plant cell tissue cultures from which soybean plants can beregenerated, plant calli, plant clumps, and plant cells that are intactin plants or parts thereof. “Plant part” includes, but is not limitedto, embryos, pollen, ovules, seeds, flowers, pods, leaves, roots, roottips, anthers, and the like.

One may obtain soybean plants according to the present invention bydirectly by growing the seed of 5.8 i or by any other means. A soybeanplant having all of the physiological and morphological characteristicsof 5.8 i can be obtained by any suitable means, including, but notlimited to, regenerating plants or plant parts from tissue culture orcuttings. The scope of the present invention is not limited by themethod by which the plant is obtained.

DEPOSIT INFORMATION

Seed from soybean cultivar 5.8 i, disclosed above and recited in theappended claims, was deposited with the American Type Culture Collection(ATCC), 10801 University Boulevard, Manasses, Va. 20110 on Dec. 15,2005.

The present invention is not limited to the exemplified embodiments, butis intended to encompass all such modifications and variations as comewithin the scope of the following claims.

1. A soybean seed designated 5.8 i, wherein a sample of said seed hasbeen deposited under ATCC Accession No. PTA-7274.
 2. A plant, or a partthereof, produced by growing the seed of claim
 1. 3. Pollen of the plantof claim
 2. 4. An ovule of the plant of claim
 2. 5. A soybean plant, ora part thereof, having all the physiological and morphologicalcharacteristics of the soybean plant of claim
 2. 6. A tissue culture ofregenerable cells from the plant, or part thereof, of claim
 2. 7. Asoybean plant regenerated from the tissue culture of claim 6, whereinthe plant has all of the physiological and morphological characteristicsof a plant produced by growing seed designated 5.8 i and deposited underATCC Accession No. PTA-7274.
 8. The tissue culture of claim 6, whereinthe regenerable cells selected from the group consisting of protoplastsand calli and wherein the regenerable cells are derived from a plantpart selected from the group consisting of leaf, pollen, ovule,cotyledon, hypocotyl, embryo, root, pod, flower, shoot and stalk.
 9. Amethod for developing a soybean plant in a soybean breeding programusing plant breeding techniques, comprising using the soybean plant, orpart thereof, of claim 2 as a source of breeding material.
 10. Themethod of claim 9 wherein said plant breeding techniques are selectedfrom the group consisting of single seed descent, modified single seeddescent, recurrent selection, reselection, mass selection, bulkselection, backcrossing, pedigree breeding, mutation breeding,restriction fragment length polymorphism enhanced selection, geneticmarker enhanced selection, and transformation.
 11. A method forproducing an F₁ progeny of soybean cultivar 5.8 i, comprising: (a)crossing soybean cultivar 5.8 i with a second soybean plant to yield anF₁ progeny soybean seed; and (b) growing said F₁ progeny seed to yield asoybean cultivar 5.8 i derived soybean plant.
 12. An F₁ progeny ofsoybean cultivar 5.8 i, or part thereof, produced by the method of claim11.